Search String: Display: Description: Sort:

Results:

References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*Non\s+LBC\s+Tool\s+Question\s*$/: 18 ]

Total 18 documents matching your query.

1. Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 12:14:41 -0400
I know, I know, nothing to do with LBCs, but if anyone would know the answer, it's you guyz. I want to regrout the tile on our kitchen floor. Forst, I want to remove all the old grout. AND I do not o
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01654.html (7,375 bytes)

2. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 19:47:32 -0400
I believe I know what is a hammer drill. That ain't it. When I was younger, working in a welding/fabrication shop, after welding a large seam with white wire at about 200 amps, I used to clean off th
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01719.html (8,805 bytes)

3. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 19:57:47 -0400
You will have to do it by hand. See if you can find a carbide toothed hand held knife. It looks like a single carbide saw blade tooth with a handle. Dig it in and scrape, chip, curse, and scrape some
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01723.html (8,902 bytes)

4. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 19:42:28 -0500
This old house had a show on regrouting the bathroom. They used a churchly to clean out the grooves and put in new grout. If you don't have a churchly, Ed may have a few for sale <G>
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01728.html (9,557 bytes)

5. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 23:20:04 -0000
ok chuck(geez! it feels like i'm talking to myself here....) here's what will work and do a flat rate job but yer gonna have to buy a tool! you need a variable speed dremel tool(modelers use them) .
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01739.html (10,327 bytes)

6. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Mon, 20 Aug 2001 23:46:04 -0400
What you really need, if the grout is far gone enough, is a ball peen and an old screwdriver . . . ( be an artiste instead of one of those power tool guys ) If you don't have a ball peen around, a se
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01740.html (8,163 bytes)

7. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 11:09:13 EDT
How about...and I don't know the correct name of the tool....long steel rod with a flat end, used to chip through a rock when digging in rocky soil. They carry them at the lumber yards here. The weig
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01766.html (9,168 bytes)

8. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 11:12:59 EDT
Brad, Do you mean church key? Or is that how they say it in south Ft. Worth after the eighth Modello Negro? RH Be more concerned about your character than about your reputation, because your characte
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01767.html (8,572 bytes)

9. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 12:22:01 -0500
Ok All, I must have hit the wrong place in the spel chequer before the post went out. I was referring to a Church Key!!! Beer Can Opener from the 60's!!
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01786.html (9,348 bytes)

10. Fw: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 16:24:18 -0400
Hey Brad, Sorry to dump some more grief on ya but a "church key" opened bottles, not cans in the 60s. Kent
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01800.html (9,013 bytes)

11. Fw: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 17:33:17 -0400
Sorry, but a traditional church key was a thick wire bent in the shape of an old door lock key opening that required a "ward" style key! It was a bottle opener only, not a can opener. I know what you
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01806.html (8,289 bytes)

12. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 17:32:04 -0500
<<Hey Brad, Sorry to dump some more grief on ya but a "church key" opened bottles, not cans in the 60s. Sorry, Kent!! WRONG again!! Pics address will follow tomorrow (or so). Ed
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01811.html (8,166 bytes)

13. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 19:42:02 EDT
<< Sorry, Kent!! WRONG again!! Pics address will follow tomorrow (or so). Ed >> Sure glad someone knew what a Churchly was. In the 60's just about everyone had one on their key chain or at least in t
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01815.html (7,970 bytes)

14. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Tue, 21 Aug 2001 20:43:20 -0400
In the 70's, when I was using them, the definition had expanded to a beverage opener that was carried on the person, usually on a key chain, but . . . I had several sewed on to my jeans. --Original M
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01817.html (8,073 bytes)

15. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2001 09:49:04 EDT
- - - - - - - - - - - - - I gotta agree with Ed here. Beer was mostly sold in cans. A church key was the can opener. (Not that I drank much beer in the '60s!) Not totally related, but I was just at a
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01836.html (8,251 bytes)

16. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2001 10:26:35 -0400
I'm a little late following this thread, but all thru the '50s and '60s a "churchkey" was a flat metal do-hickey with a curved, pointed can opener on one end, and a slightly rounded and curved bottle
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01842.html (7,920 bytes)

17. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2001 08:58:20 -0700
The other "gizmo" we keep talking about was just called a bottle opener, right?
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01850.html (8,409 bytes)

18. Re: Non LBC Tool Question (score: 1)
Author: Unknown
Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2001 13:16:21 -0400
I always thought a "bottle opener" was screwed to the wall or to the side of a cooler of hot pop, and said CocaCola in flowing script. Used it to open my clear Birch Beer. chuckC
/html/spridgets/2001-08/msg01861.html (7,882 bytes)


This search system is powered by Namazu